Martin McCormick wrote:
Right now, I have a shell script that does the following:hostname=`echo $NEWDEV |awk 'BEGIN{FS="."}{print $1}'` domain=`echo $NEWDEV |awk 'BEGIN{FS="."}{print $2}'` top0=`echo $NEWDEV |awk 'BEGIN{FS="."}{print $3}'` top1=`echo $NEWDEV |awk 'BEGIN{FS="."}{print $4}'` That looks inefficient (dumb) so I ask, is there a way to assign the fields in an awk expression to shell variables as one runs awk once? Being able to do that would mean one run of awk instead of the 4 shown here and, if file accesses are involved, there is only one of those. Thanks.Martin McCormick WB5AGZ Stillwater, OK Systems EngineerOSU Information Technology Department Telecommunications Services Group
Yes, but it takes both awk and shell to do it. And, because the awk script has a bunch of stuff in it that the shell recognizes, this works best if you can put the script in a file. FYI, I tested this, cut and past to a file and the command line, it worked for me (of course, I had to use some bogus but properly formatted input ;).
The file would look like this: BEGIN{FS="."} {print "hostname=" $1";domain=" $2";top0=" $3";top1=" $4} The shell part is this: eval $(echo $NEWDEV | awk -f awkscriptname)I prefer the $(...) to the grave accent form, it's easier to read. But if you need backwards compatibility with a shell that doesn't support the new syntax, use the back ticks.
-- Bob McGowan
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